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Just Dean's avatar

I'm becoming more and more aware that it is all about the peak hours for utilities. This was driven home for me recently when I became aware of a new pilot rate structure introduced by my utility Public Service of New Mexico (PNM), https://www.pnm.com/timeofday .

Summer : 5 - 8 pm = $0.31 / kWh. Off peak = $0.08 / kWh.

Winter : 5 - 8 am & pm = $0.17 / kWh. Off peak = $0.07 / kWh.

It doesn't take a rocket scientist to see how short-duration energy storage, e.g., batteries, can be part of the solution to this problem.

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Robert Hargraves's avatar

Even the EIA source data is not clear about kWh units. A kWh(thermal) is a unit of heat energy, and a kWh(electric) a unit of electric or work energy. It takes roughly 3 kWh(t) to generate 1 kWh(e). The comparisons of space heating and space cooling are devoid of meaning without more information.. Typically heating is with kWh(t) from natural gas burning, and cooling with kWh(e).

Note China is using rejected heat from nuclear power generation for district heating. A review of my new book, New Nuclear is HOT, has an example of this. https://energycentral.com/c/ec/book-nuclear-hot-glowing-steel-public-support

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